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EDITORS’ NOTES

Decades after its release, Never Mind the Bollocks remains one of the most thrilling punk albums of all time. Its layers of fiery guitars and pummeling drums beneath Johnny Rotten's sneering, staccato call to arms still sound fresh and vital. Bracing sermons on British youth's bleak future, like "God Save the Queen" and "Anarchy in the U.K.," felt genuinely shocking, even threatening, in 1977. The band's sly humor and love of their musical forebears are more obvious today, but these tracks rock just as hard as they ever did.

EDITORS’ NOTES

Decades after its release, Never Mind the Bollocks remains one of the most thrilling punk albums of all time. Its layers of fiery guitars and pummeling drums beneath Johnny Rotten's sneering, staccato call to arms still sound fresh and vital. Bracing sermons on British youth's bleak future, like "God Save the Queen" and "Anarchy in the U.K.," felt genuinely shocking, even threatening, in 1977. The band's sly humor and love of their musical forebears are more obvious today, but these tracks rock just as hard as they ever did.

TITLE

TIME

Holidays In the Sun

3:22

Bodies

3:03

No Feelings

2:51

Liar

2:41

Problems

4:11

God Save the Queen

3:20

Seventeen

2:02

Anarchy In the U.K.

3:31

Submission

4:12

Pretty Vacant

3:18

New York

3:06

EMI

3:13

12 Songs, 38 Minutes

Released: Oct 1, 1977

℗ 1977 Warner Bros. Records, manufactured and marketed by Rhino Entertainment Company for the United States and Canada